Renew Newcastle

This Wednesday, DECA is getting together with the newly-formed Gerrard East Community Organization (GECO) to eat, drink and be inspired. We’re hosting a chat with Marcus Westbury of Renew Newcastle. Marcus led the revitalization of a down and out commercial strip in Newcastle, Australia with innovative and creative ideas. He’s going to tell us how he did it and what we can learn from him.

Wednesday, March 7, 7 – 9 p.m.
Naval Club of Canada
1910 Gerrard Street East (just west of Woodbine)

Admission: Pay what you can (cash bar)

Can’t make it?  We’re going to experiment and webcast the event at Vokle.com. I’ll send out the link through the blog and I’ll also try to set it up on the blog at decadiaries.wordpress.com.  Stay tuned.

One more thing? Here is a cool little map of Toronto residents’ associations produced by The Grid’s David Topping.

 

The Shooting Of Michael Eligon

From Friday’s Toronto Star, this story about the man who was killed on Milverton Blvd on February 3rd.

By Curtis Rush

One month after a police shooting, the Star has obtained a video of the fatal shooting in which three gunshots are heard and police cruisers are seen racing to the scene.

The video was handed over to the Special Investigations Unit, the provincial police watchdog agency, by James Sheppard, the neighbour who filmed the tragedy.

Michael Eligon, a black man of 29 believed to be mentally ill, was shot at 10:15 a.m. Friday, Feb. 3 in the middle of Milverton Blvd., in the Coxwell and Danforth Aves. area.

Witnesses tell the Star three bullets were fired, but two went astray. One struck a porch window at 552 Milverton Blvd. and one a garbage can on the street at 554 Milverton. A Starreporter saw evidence of this and took photographs.

Doug Pritchard, retired co-director of Christian Peacemaker Teams and now a community activist, has called on neighbours, politicians and health-care advocates to join in a vigil and walk at 10 a.m. Saturday, beginning at Toronto East General Hospital and ending at 55 Division on Coxwell Ave.

The walk is meant to mourn Eligon’s death, to express concern for his family and the police officers involved, and to seek systems that would prevent such deaths.

Pritchard, who witnessed the shooting, said his neighbours are concerned.

“We are asking for better police training and around-the-clock crisis teams to prevent this from happening again,” Pritchard said. “We believe other ways are better.”

Through numerous interviews with family, witnesses and homeowners, the Star has pieced together a likely sequence of events that led to the fatal shooting.

Times and events noted in this story are unofficial.

Jan. 31: Michael Eligon is admitted to Toronto East General Hospital for a 72-hour mental assessment. He is set to be released Friday, Feb. 3.

Feb. 3, 6 a.m.: From the hospital, Eligon phones his foster mother in Mississauga and follows up with phone calls at 7 a.m. and 8 a.m., apparently arranging to be picked up. When someone arrives, that person learns Eligon is nowhere to be found.

9:30 a.m. to 10 a.m.: Eligon, clad in hospital gown, toque and socks, enters the R&S Convenience Store at Sammon and Woodington Aves. only steps from the hospital. By all accounts, he is tall and skinny. He is holding a cellphone and takes two pairs of scissors from the shelf while saying nothing to the store clerk. The clerk, who is about 5-foot-9 and 140 pounds, grapples outside the store with Eligon. He gets him in a headlock before Eligon breaks away. The clerk suffers a small cut on his hand. The cellphone left behind by Eligon in the store begins going off with a flurry of incoming calls and messages.

Around 10 a.m.: Eligon approaches two cars and tries to get inside but is turned away. He walks three blocks south on Woodington Ave. onto Milverton Blvd.

10:03 am.: James Sheppard is in his dining room when his dog starts barking at the noise of someone trying the back door knob of his Milverton Blvd. home. Eligon flees with Sheppard yelling at him as he chases him down the laneway. Eligon crosses the street and Sheppard yells, “Don’t go in there.” He begins dialing the non-emergency police line when he sees a police car and flags him down. “Where is he?” the officer shouts. Sheppard points to a driveway on the south side.

Next-door neighbour William Bartlett also sees Eligon run across the street to the south side, where he goes down an alley. Irene Koops-Macpherson, who lives on the south side of Milverton, sees four police officers in her backyard, shouting to each other, “Where is he?”

10:07 a.m.: John Reilly, who lives on the north side of Milverton, is confronted towards the back of his house by Eligon, who asks for his keys. Reilly orders him out of his yard and Eligon runs to the front. Reilly’s wife calls 911.

10:10 a.m.: More police arrive on the street. Eligon breaks in the back door of Lisa Walter’s house and goes through it from top to bottom, not taking anything, and leaves by the front door. A few doors down, Eligon attracts the attention of Vince, a renovator, who sees him wandering around a backyard. He calls from the top floor to see if Eligon is okay, but gets no response. When he goes down to the backyard to confront him, the man has fled, but he hears noises in a neighbouring backyard. In front of the house, Vince sees a police officer at the intersection of Milverton Blvd. and Glebemount Ave. and alerts him. The officer draws his firearm and goes behind the houses to search for Eligon. Moments later, Eligon emerges from a laneway onto Milverton, in full view of close to a dozen police officers.

10:13 a.m.: Barrie White, hearing loud voices, goes outside his house and sees a line of police officers. Eligon is walking “zombie-like” towards them with a pair of scissors in each hand. Another neighbour sees Eligon with his hands outstretched.

10:15 a.m.: According to neighbours, an officer steps forward and fires three shots, but only one strikes Eligon. Two bullets go astray. Witnesses say another officer kicks and stomps Eligon in the middle of the street. Emergency personnel try to perform CPR. The officer who shot Eligon is escorted away.

Friday Fun

One and All are Invited to…Treasure Buddies

Friday, Feb. 24, 2012

Showtime: 7:00 p.m – Ends at approx.: 8:45

At the Salvation Army on Cedarvale Ave. (behind Gledhill school).

$3 per adult, $2 per child (2-12 yrs.), Children under 2 are free
Refreshments Bar (popcorn, drinks, chocolate bars, etc.)

All proceeds to the Kidzone After School Program run out of this Salvation Army location.

 

 

 

 

 

Check out this very cool upcycling event at Earl Haig School – at Coxwell, just south of Danforth.

What Has DECA Done For Me Lately?

Volunteering with DECA is more than just fancy parties, expensive wines and hobnobbing with the rich and famous.  We actually do stuff too.  Like this….

DECA Kids Gear & Clothing Sale

We’ve had lots of interest in this sale so we’ve confirmed Sunday, March 25th from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. at Kimbourne Park United Church at 200 Wolverleigh Blvd., just north of the Danforth, east of Coxwell. The cost per table is $20.

If you’ve got a basement full of outgrown clothes, maternity pants and perfectly good toys that your children no longer touch, get on board and clear some of that stuff out. For $20, you can secure a table at our event and sell your spring and summer goods to other parents in need. It’ll be a fun day for everyone. We’ll have crafts and other activities on tap for the kids while you sell or shop. We’ll also be offering a “spit and polish” service — clean up those new toys, tighten the screws and install new batteries (if required) right on site, before you take them home.

Your selling fee will help cover our organizing costs (space rental and posters). Any money left over will be donated to DECA’s latest worthy project — some community gardens at Main and Stephenson. And if it helps you out, we’ll haul anything left over down to a donation centre at the end of the day.

To snag a table, send us an email at deca.arts@gmail.com and do it before March 1st!

Renew Newcastle

You already know that DECA’s Business Revitalization Team has been working with local businesses to improve our commercial strip of the Danforth. And you may have read our own Catherine Porter’s columns in the Toronto Star about empty storefronts. Now the BRT is teaming up with a residents’ association around Gerrard Street (Gerrard East Community Organization) to present an evening with Marcus Westbury. Westbury led an ambitious experiment in Newcastle, Australia to fill up empty storefronts – first temporarily with artists, non-profits and small businesses and then with full fledged businesses. What can we learn from his experience?

Join us on Wednesday, March 7th from 7-9 p.m. at the Naval Club (1910 Gerrard Street East – just west of Woodbine) to find out.  We’ll have a bit of food on hand, drinks will be available (for purchase) and we hope inspiration will flow freely.  It’s pay what you can, just to help us cover the cost of the space.

And you know we’ll make it a good time. We’re just that sort.

Newcastle poster (See the poster here)

DECA On Facebook

DECA is new and improved on Facebook. Check it out. ‘Like’ us.  Comment. Join the conversation here.

This Blog Is What EVERYONE Will Be Talking About This Week

What’s Up At Danforth and Woodbine?

What’s not. It looks like the old CIBC building on the southeast corner will become a BMO – Bank of Montreal.  Across the street on the northwest corner, we’ve confirmed a Dollarama will be opening up shop. This is a link to a recent story on Open File about the condo development. Cozy Cafe is now offering breakfast everyday and yoga on Thursday evenings.  And on Monday, don’t forget about the Stay and Play In Your ‘Hood activities and promotions at Silly Goose Kids, Celena’s Bakery, Circus and Cozy Cafe.

The Day After Yesterday

Robin Green is  is a local writer who recently published an e-book novel set around Danforth and Woodbine in the present and back in the 1850s when the area was farmland.

Three sixth grade friends discover strange marbles in the weedy yard of a house near Gladstone school. Why do the marbles keep appearing? And why, whenever the children touch one, are they instantly transported from a cool Toronto spring to visions of a hot country summer? The marbles are more than the kids bargained for, showing the children images of a lost century. They see a hamlet where cars, telephones, electric lights are unheard of, and a farmhouse where a young couple mourns the death of their teenage daughter.  When one of the friends goes missing, the others decide the marbles are for more than visions. They have a friend to rescue, and not one but many lives depend on them. 

The book is available for download to a Kindle, iPad, Kobo, or other online device, or for reading on a laptop, from https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/119681. You can read the first 7 chapters (out of 22) for free, or buy the entire book for just $2. Isn’t that the neatest thing you learned about today?

Hirut Hoot

Staying close to Danforth and Woodbine, check out Hirut Hoot – a ‘comedy  night spectacular!’ This lovely Ethiopian restaurant will feature comics Rhiannon Archer, Kevin MacDonald, Scott McCrickard, Matt Shurt, Ron Sparks and Winston Spear. Carolyn Bennett is the host. It begins at 9 p.m. and the cover is $5. If you order a meal, that $5 will be discounted off your bill. If this inaugural event is successful, organizers hope to make it a monthly gig.

Councillor Davis’ Skating Party
Sunday, February 26, 2012, 11:30 am – 1:30 pm, at the East York Memorial Arena, 888 Cosburn Ave. 
 Join Councillor Janet Davis for some skating fun, a figure skating demo by one of the East York Skating Club’s syncro teams, face painting, crafts, prizes and cookies.  Children under 7 must wear a CSA approved helmet. Ice skate rentals are available. For more information please call 416-392-4035.

Eggs

Alyssa Golden lives in the neighbourhood and is bringing in farm fresh, free range eggs. She needs to buy 30 dozen/week to make the minimum order from the farmer. If you would like more information, contact her at alysagolden(at)gmail.com.

 

Photographer Wanted

The latest in Catherine Porter’s series on neighbourhoods in the Toronto Star is below…

Also, we had such a great response from DECA members about recommendations for contractors  we’re now looking for photographers to do casual family photos. I’ll start by suggesting Stephen Caissie.  He’s a DECA member and has donated a lot of his fine work to this here blog and to some of our Business Revitalization Team projects.

Stephen also posts a lot of his local photos to the Art of the Danforth flickr page that is featured on the DECA  Diaries blog.  Yes, if you actually visit the blog’s website instead of just reading it on your e-mail, you will see the link to these photos and gosh darn it, some of these pics are pretty awesome.

If you have further recommendations, please post them on them on the blog and share the love.

***********************

Locals Exasperated By Derelict Gerrard St. E. Storefronts and Buildings

By Catherine Porter

Inside Lazy Daisy’s Café, Dawn Chapman serves up foamy lattes, Lindt chocolate croissants and curried cauliflower soup.

Outside, the street serves up desolation and despair.

The once-mighty Little India bazaar on Gerrard St. E. is now riddled with dirty, derelict storefronts, many of which have seen no tenants besides roosting pigeons for years.

“That building is my major beef,” Chapman says, looking out her café window at the shell of a giant household items store. Its windows are grubby, the floors inside dirty and strewn with mop buckets and fire extinguishers. From this, you might think the owner was cleaning it up for a new tenant. Except it has looked like this for four years now, Chapman says — a museum set for the recession.

“It’s ridiculous,” says Chapman, who opened her little café last October. “Why should he be allowed to bring down my neighbourhood? We have to make a law to push landlords to upkeep their properties.”

Winnipeg has such a law. It’s called the Vacant and Derelict Buildings Bylaw. It requires landlords of empty buildings to pay for an annual city inspection and permit, starting at $2,000 the first year and rising to $6,500 the fourth. Landlords who repeatedly don’t respond to repair orders issued by inspector have their property seized by the city and sold off.

Most of the buildings in question are run-down gang houses in the city’s north end. But the bylaw can been used against derelict storefronts too. This week, the city took action against two downtown hotels.

“This is the part I like,” Chapman says, pointing to the City of Winnipeg’s website. Among the bylaw’s six intents, one reads: “Contribute positively to neighbourhood renewal by discouraging vacant buildings to remain inactive for extended periods of time.”

Her point: all it takes to transform a safe, vibrant main street into “da hood” is a few empty, dirty storefronts. They may be private property, but they affect the public space. We all walk down that street, we catch the streetcar there, we shop and dine and talk to our neighbours . . . until it starts to look rundown and ugly and maybe not so safe, in which case, we scurry elsewhere.

Main streets are the village squares of Toronto’s neighbourhoods, but they are privately owned.

Here, a commercial building can sit empty for years with no repercussions. In fact, the city offers landlords a one-third property-tax cut if they can’t find a tenant. But what if a landlord simply doesn’t want to rent out the space? I talked to one Gerrard St. E. landlord who says he hasn’t found the right tenant for 10 years. Ten years! He should have bought a mausoleum.

Another landlord who owns an empty building on Danforth Ave. near Woodbine says she wasn’t comfortable renting the space out to a stranger. She’d rather it remained empty, losing money.

Locals living near Gerrard recently formed a residents’ association, the Gerrard East Community Organization. They too want to revitalize their strip. Their proposal: cover the empty storefronts with wooden boards, painted by local artists and children.

It worked in Seattle’s Columbia City neighbourhood seven years ago. There, the locals painted what they wanted to see inside those stores on the plywood window coverings: an ice cream shop, a toy store, a dance studio. The murals looked so realistic, drivers started pulling over to shop in the real establishments.

“It was just amazing how it visually changed that block,” recalls Jim Diers, the former director of Seattle’s Department of Neighbourhoods. (Can you believe they have something like that? Stay tuned, I’ll get back to Diers in a later column.) “It looked alive, and within a year, we had to take down every one of those murals because businesses were coming back.

“They were signs that people cared about the place, that is wasn’t unsafe. And that makes a big difference.”

In Seattle, the neighbours got a small government grant to cover their supplies. The residents around Gerrard St. were hoping for some money and support from the local Gerrard India Bazaar Business Improvement Association, which has a $200,000 annual budget it spends on things like street flowers.

That doesn’t look likely.

“It’s a good idea,” says general manager Subbu Chintaluri. “But, as far as I’m concerned, the property owners should take it up by themselves.”

If the property owners can’t find the energy or money for a bottle of Windex, how likely is it they will pay for art and wood supplies?

Positive change doesn’t happen by itself. It has to be attentively coaxed.